Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt, who raised more than $37 million in just 19 days for those affected by Hurricane Harvey, won the 2017 Walter Payton Man of the Year Award on Saturday night.

Watt was announced as the winner of the award, given to an NFL player who has "a significant positive impact on his community," at the NFL Honors event in Minneapolis, where Super Bowl LII will be played Sunday.

Ray Lewis, Randy Moss and Brian Urlacher were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday in their first year of eligibility. They are joined in the class of 2018 by Terrell Owens, Brian Dawkins, Jerry Kramer, Robert Brazile and Bobby Beathard.

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"I've been fortunate to be on this stage and to win Defensive Player of the Year awards, but everything that you do on the field pales in comparison to what you do off the field,'' Watt said. "And at the end of my life, if I'm remembered as a football player and a good football player and that's all I'm remembered for, then I did a poor job in my life. When I go to my grave I want to be remembered as a guy who helped people out and who tried to do as much as he could off the field to be the best man he could be. I'm trying to make my family proud and my fans proud, and go out there and just be the best person I can be and leave the world a little bit better.''

Olsen launched plans for a one-of-a-kind, cardiac neurodevelopmental center in Charlotte, North Carolina, through his "HEARTest Yard" initiative, while Watson led a campaign to battle human trafficking and violence against the poor.

After Harvey hit Houston in August, Watt set up an online fundraiser with the original goal of raising $200,000. However, his videos on social media went viral. Many celebrities and prominent NFL figures made donations to the cause, including Tennessee Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk, who donated $1 million.

In October, Watt announced that $30.15 million of the money raised will be distributed among four nonprofit organizations to help rebuild homes, restore child-care centers and provide food and medical care. The other $7 million, Watt said, was set aside to be used in 2018 "as we continue to assess and analyze the evolving relief efforts."

Watt and his Texans teammates also distributed supplies before the season to those affected by the flooding from the hurricane. Since then, the three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year has spent time in Houston and its surrounding areas visiting with people and handing out food and goods.

The Walter Payton Man of the Year Award is named after the legendary Chicago Bears running back who died in 1999 after battling a rare liver disease.